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Ethanol has a higher boiling point than diethyl ether because ethanol has stronger intermolecular forces due to hydrogen bonding. Hydrogen bonding creates attractions between ethanol molecules, requiring more energy to separate them compared to the weaker London dispersion forces present in diethyl ether. This results in a higher boiling point for ethanol.
Fractional distillation is appropriate to separate ethanol and water because they have different boiling points: ethanol at 78.4°C and water at 100°C. During fractional distillation, the mixture is heated to a temperature in between these boiling points, allowing the ethanol to vaporize but not the water. The vapor is then condensed and collected, resulting in separate ethanol and water fractions.
When you put frozen ethanol into liquid ethanol, the frozen ethanol will begin to melt and mix with the liquid ethanol. Both states of ethanol will reach an equilibrium temperature, and the frozen ethanol will ultimately dissolve into the liquid ethanol to form a homogeneous solution.
Yes, distilled ethanol is similar to pure ethanol. Distilled ethanol is produced using distillation to purify the ethanol, resulting in a high level of purity. Pure ethanol refers to ethanol that is free from impurities, and distilled ethanol typically meets this criteria.
The chemical formula of ethanol is C2H5OH.
no
The BP at US1 and 192 has non ethanol gas....
I'm not sure if you have them there, but BP stations usually don't have ethanol in their fuel.
The only way to tell whether ethanol is present in gasoline is to look at the gasoline pump. If it contains ethanol, there should be a large sticker on it stating what percentage of ethanol is in the gasoline.
That will depends on where the fuel is being sold. Around my area ( central Illinois ) every gas station has 10% ethanol.
Ethanol has a higher boiling point than diethyl ether because ethanol has stronger intermolecular forces due to hydrogen bonding. Hydrogen bonding creates attractions between ethanol molecules, requiring more energy to separate them compared to the weaker London dispersion forces present in diethyl ether. This results in a higher boiling point for ethanol.
Fractional distillation is appropriate to separate ethanol and water because they have different boiling points: ethanol at 78.4°C and water at 100°C. During fractional distillation, the mixture is heated to a temperature in between these boiling points, allowing the ethanol to vaporize but not the water. The vapor is then condensed and collected, resulting in separate ethanol and water fractions.
Harris Oil on US441 near Mt. Dora sells 87 and 93 octane ethanol-free gas; the BP on US 1 in Melbourne near the causeway that goes over to Indialantic Beach also sells it at two pumps.
The cheapest gas is generally near the outer belt of the city. Places like BP and Citgo seem to have the cheapest. In general, it's currently cheaper to get gas that is 10% ethanol, which seems to be what BP adds. Good luck finding anything below $4.07, at least as of today.
The boiling point of ethanol is 78.37°C (173.07°F) at standard atmospheric pressure.
As of July 2014, the market cap for BP p.l.c. (BP) is $157,930,682,942.25.
BP is a fuel company to find more google "BP wiki"